4.8 Article

Cathepsin W restrains peripheral regulatory T cells for mucosal immune quiescence

Journal

SCIENCE ADVANCES
Volume 9, Issue 28, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adf3924

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This study investigates the role of CTSW in regulating the differentiation and function of pTreg cells. The results show that CTSW inhibits IL-2R signaling in pTreg cells, leading to a restraint in pTreg cell generation and maintenance. This finding highlights the important role of CTSW in the mucosal immune quiescence.
Peripheral regulatory T (pT(reg)) cells are a key T cell lineage for mucosal immune tolerance and anti-inflammatory responses, and interleukin-2 receptor (IL-2R) signaling is critical for T-reg cell generation, expansion, and maintenance. The expression of IL-2R on pTreg cells is tightly regulated to ensure proper induction and function of pTreg cells without a clear molecular mechanism. We here demonstrate that CathepsinW(CTSW), a cysteine proteinase highly induced in pTreg cells under transforming growth factor-beta stimulation is essential for the restraint of pTreg cell differentiation in an intrinsic manner. Loss of CTSW results in elevated pTreg cell generation, protecting the animals from intestinal inflammation. Mechanistically, CTSW inhibits IL-2R signaling in pTreg cells by cytosolic interaction with and process of CD25, repressing signal transducer and activator of transcription 5 activation to restrain pTreg cell generation and maintenance. Hence, our data indicate that CTSW acts as a gatekeeper to calibrate pTreg cell differentiation and function for mucosal immune quiescence.

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